Actively Recruiting

Phase Not Applicable
Age: 7Years +
All Genders
NCT05665491

Role of Parent Interpretation Bias in the Transmission of Anxiety to Children

Led by Mclean Hospital · Updated on 2025-09-29

300

Participants Needed

1

Research Sites

226 weeks

Total Duration

On this page

AI-Summary

What this Trial Is About

Approximately 30% of children will experience an anxiety disorder, making anxiety the most common mental health problem among children in the United States. However, few children receive treatment and even our most effective anxiety treatments leave up to half of children in need of additional intervention. Despite the well-established role of parent anxiety in transmitting and maintaining child anxiety, the lack of data on specific parent mechanisms underlying the intergenerational transmission of anxiety is a critical barrier to informing novel targets of personalized treatments. Consistent with NIMH's Strategic Plan, Objective 2.2 to understand risk factors and behavioral indicators of mental illness across the lifespan and to identify novel intervention targets based on knowledge of psychological mechanisms, the current study focuses on interpretation bias, the tendency to perceive threat in ambiguous situations. The overall objective of this project is to empirically test a theoretical model of the intergenerational transmission of anxiety focused on parent interpretation bias as a root cause. Our specific aims are to test theorized effects of parent interpretation bias on (1) parent behavior and (2) child interpretation bias and (3) evaluate potential moderators to refine theories of intergenerational transmission of anxiety and inform future personalized interventions. Our central hypothesis is that parent interpretation bias influences child interpretation bias through its effects on maladaptive, anxiety-promoting parenting behaviors, such as accommodation and modeling of avoidant coping. To test this hypothesis, we will randomize 300 parents of children ages 7-12 to complete four weeks of a smartphone delivered interpretation bias manipulation vs. a self-assessment smartphone app condition. The interpretation bias intervention teaches parents to interpret ambiguous situations in a non-threatening manner via quick, repeated practice and corrective feedback. Before and after completing their randomly assigned condition, parent-child dyads will complete self-report and behavioral tasks designed to elicit anxiety-promoting behaviors from parents depending upon their interpretation of the ambiguous situation (speech and puzzle tasks). Parents will also complete Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) of parenting behaviors to capture the time course of effects. Finally, we will examine downstream effects of the interpretation manipulation on child interpretation bias at pre- and post- visits. We will test moderators (e.g., parent anxiety and gender) to refine theories of intergenerational transmission of anxiety and inform future personalized interventions. The long-term goal of this work is to inform personalized, mechanism-focused interventions to improve mental health outcomes for anxious children and their parents. Future studies will translate knowledge gained from this project into a scalable treatment that can be implemented entirely remotely via smartphone thereby increasing access to care

CONDITIONS

Official Title

Role of Parent Interpretation Bias in the Transmission of Anxiety to Children

Who Can Participate

Age: 7Years +
All Genders

Eligibility Criteria

Eligible

You may qualify if you...

  • Parent must speak and understand English well enough to complete assessments
  • Parent must have at least minimal anxiety severity (GAD-7 score > 5)
  • Parent must have at least a minimal level of interpretation bias (WSAP accuracy less than 70%)
  • No current psychiatric symptoms preventing consent or research participation
  • Stable on medications or psychotherapy for at least 8 weeks if receiving treatment
  • No severe suicidal ideation (PHQ-9 item 9 > 1)
  • Own an iOS or Android smartphone
  • Shared or full custody of the child for EMA assessment
  • Child aged 7 to 12 years
  • Child must speak and understand English well enough to complete assessments
  • Child must have no diagnosis of intellectual disability or autism spectrum disorder
  • No current psychiatric symptoms preventing consent or understanding of procedures
  • Child has full-scale IQ of 80 or higher on WASI
  • Child stable on medications or psychotherapy for at least 8 weeks if receiving treatment
  • Child has no severe suicidal ideation (PHQ-9 item 9 > 1)
Not Eligible

You will not qualify if you...

  • Parent or child with current psychiatric symptoms interfering with consent or research procedures
  • Severe suicidal ideation (PHQ-9 item 9 > 1) in parent or child
  • Parent or child not stable on medications or psychotherapy for at least 8 weeks if receiving treatment
  • Child diagnosed with intellectual disability or autism spectrum disorder
  • Parent does not own a smartphone
  • Parent lacks shared or full custody of the child

AI-Screening

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Trial Site Locations

Total: 1 location

1

McLean Hospital

Belmont, Massachusetts, United States, 02478

Actively Recruiting

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Research Team

C

Courtney Beard, PhD

CONTACT

How is the study designed?

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Masking

SINGLE

Allocation

RANDOMIZED

Model

PARALLEL

Primary Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Number of Arms

2

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Role of Parent Interpretation Bias in the Transmission of Anxiety to Children | DecenTrialz